The lack of a mint mark indicates that the coin was minted in Philadelphia. The mint mark P wasn't added to quarters until 1980.
It's worth 25 cents.
Many of the quarters are valued in price close to $50 each. The amount for each quarter will vary depending upon its condition.
The Philadelphia Mint made 809,764,016, the Denver Mint made 860,118,839
From 1968 to date. The mintmark's will be on the obverse (front) of the coin, to the right of the hair ribbon.
its from the phillidelphia mint
It's worth 25 cents.
JLA is a monogram, not an acronym, and belongs to the artist Jack L. Ahr who designed the bicentennial quarter's reverse. The fact that your quarter doesn't have a mint mark simply means it was minted in Philadelphia. The P mint mark wasn't used on quarters (and most other coins) until 1980.
Many of the quarters are valued in price close to $50 each. The amount for each quarter will vary depending upon its condition.
The Philadelphia Mint made 809,764,016, the Denver Mint made 860,118,839
From 1968 to date. The mintmark's will be on the obverse (front) of the coin, to the right of the hair ribbon.
its from the phillidelphia mint
a quarter
made in the Philadelphia Mint
No mint mark means it was minted in Philadelphia. The quarter is worth exactly 25 cents.
On the 1979 quarter, the mint mark is located on the reverse side of the coin, just to the right of the eagle's tail. It can be either "D" for the Denver Mint or "P" for the Philadelphia Mint, though Philadelphia coins from that year typically do not have a mint mark. If there is no mint mark, it indicates the coin was minted in Philadelphia.
The US did not mint regular issue quarters in 1975. Bicentennial quarters were made instead.
There is not always a mint mark on coins. If your coin does not have a mintmark it means that it was made at the Philadelphia mint in Pennsylvania.